2001 ICC Trophy squads

Twenty-two teams participated in the 2001 ICC Trophy, the seventh edition of the tournament. Four teams – France, Germany, Nepal, and Uganda – were making their tournament debuts. Four teams also did not return from the previous edition of the tournament in 1997Bangladesh and Kenya had been granted automatic qualification for the 2003 World Cup, West Africa were refused entry to Canada, and Italy unexpectedly withdrew due to a dispute over the eligibility of their players.

Argentina

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: South Africa Grant Dugmore


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Bermuda

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: Guyana Mark Harper


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Canada

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: Australia Jeff Thomas


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Denmark

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: Denmark Ole Mortensen


Source: ESPNcricinfo

East and Central Africa

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: Ismail Hassan

  • Kevin Cumings
  • Arshad Dudhia
  • Arif Ebrahim
  • Chad Gomm
  • Galoli Jetha
  • Viru Kamania †

  • Shamsher Madhani
  • Raymond Msiagi
  • Feroz Munshi
  • Arif Pali ‡
  • Yekesh Patel
  • Mohamed Yusufali


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Fiji

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Player-coach: Fiji Neil Maxwell

  • Taione Batina
  • Joji Bulabalavu
  • Iniasi Cakacaka
  • Johnny Hussain
  • Maika Kamikamica
  • Neil Maxwell †‡
  • Iliesa Navatu

  • Colin Rika
  • Jone Seuvou
  • Jone Sorovakatini
  • Tavo Sorovakatini
  • Atunaisi Tawatatau
  • Seci Tuiwai
  • Waisake Tukana


Source: ESPNcricinfo

France

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

  • Arun Ayyavooraju
  • David Bordes
  • Guy Brumant ‡
  • Val Brumant
  • Gareth Edwards
  • Sulanga Hewawalandanage
  • Simon Hewitt

  • Shabbir Hussain †
  • George James
  • Peter Linton
  • Philip Martin
  • Ayeppin Rattiname
  • Paul Wakefield


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Germany

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: England Harold Rhodes

  • Zaheer Ahmed
  • Bruce Auchinleck
  • Abdul Hamid Bhatti ‡
  • Abdul Salam Bhatti
  • Mark Brodersen
  • Jakob Bumke
  • Renald Buss

  • Gerrit Müller †
  • Shamas-ud-Din Khan
  • Younis Khan
  • Badar Munir
  • Ayub Pasha
  • Hans Petersen
  • Tayyab Rathore


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Gibraltar

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: England Richard Cox

  • Gareth Balban
  • Richard Buzaglo
  • Tim Buzaglo
  • Steve Cary
  • Clive Clinton
  • Gary De'Ath
  • Ian Farrell

  • Steven Gonzalez
  • Paul Howard
  • Daniel Johnson ‡
  • Dave Robeson
  • Christian Rocca †
  • Stephen Shephard
  • Chris Watkins


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Hong Kong

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: England Andy Moles


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Ireland

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: New Zealand Ken Rutherford


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Israel

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: Israel Herschel Gutman

  • Raymond Aston
  • Hillel Awasker
  • Jacky Divekar
  • Mahendra Jaiswar
  • Benzie Kehimkar
  • Gershon Massil
  • Isaac Massil ‡

  • Yefeth Nagavkar †
  • Shalom Rubin
  • Steven Shein
  • David Silver
  • Avi Talkar
  • Adrian Vard
  • Menashe Wadavkar


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Malaysia

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: Australia Lyndsay Walker


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Namibia

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Player-coach: Namibia Lennie Louw


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Nepal

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: Pakistan Aftab Baloch

  • Sanjam Regmi
  • Jay Sarraf †
  • Durgaraj Sen
  • Monick Shrestha
  • Sandip Shrestha
  • Ganesh Thakuri


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Netherlands

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: Barbados Emmerson Trotman


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Papua New Guinea

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: Papua New Guinea William Maha


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Scotland

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: England Jim Love and England Mike Hendrick


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Singapore

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: Australia Bruce Yardley

  • Narayanan Balasubramaniam
  • Joshua Dearing †‡
  • Kiran Deshpande
  • Shehzad Haque
  • Rishi Kaul
  • Sunder Mani
  • Peter Muruthi

  • Johann Pieris
  • Zeng Renchun
  • Andrew Scott
  • Sandeep Seth
  • Mohamed Shoib
  • Zubin Shroff
  • Ravi Thambinayagam


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Uganda

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: Uganda Andrew Meya


Source: ESPNcricinfo

United Arab Emirates

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: Pakistan Naved Anjum


Source: ESPNcricinfo

United States

Only players who appeared in at least one match at the tournament are listed. The leading run-scorer is marked with a dagger (†) and the leading wicket-taker with a double dagger (‡).

Coach: India Syed Abid Ali


Source: ESPNcricinfo

Withdrawn teams

Italy

Italy named a fourteen-man squad for the tournament in April 2001.[1] However, following an ICC meeting in June, the player qualification rules for the tournament were altered, which had the effect of making four Italian squad members ineligible. The Italian team withdrew in protest.[2]

Coach: England Doug Ferguson

West Africa

All seventeen members of the West African team's touring party (14 players and three officials) were refused visas to Canada, forcing the team to withdraw from the tournament only a few days before its start.[3]

Coach: Sierra Leone Cyril Panda

  • Adedapo Adegoyke
  • Wale Adeoye
  • Kofi Anaefi
  • Henry Anthony
  • Muhammad Kamara
  • Alex Kanyako
  • Sao Kanyako

  • Albert Kpundeh
  • Sahr Kpundeh
  • Charles Okodua
  • Oladotun Olatunji
  • Olubunmi Olufawo
  • Joseph Talleh
  • Okun Ukpong

Sources

  1. Tony Munro (25 April 2001). "Scuderi included in Italian squad for ICC Trophy" – ESPncricinfo. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  2. (25 June 2001). "Italy Withdraws from ICC Trophy" – ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  3. Tony Munro (13 July 2001). "ICC Trophy: West African officials unhappy with the confusion in Canada" – ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2 April 2016.

External links

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